2020 Wrapped: Our Work

Mary Ruth Raphael Blog, Inspiration

Whew. 2020 was quite a year. While we won’t deny it was challenging in many ways, it also was a great year full of hard work, creative energy and winning results. We helped clients across all industries navigate changes and crises brought on by COVID-19. We are so thankful to our clients for sticking with us through a year filled with so much uncertainty. We can’t wait to see what 2021 brings!  Here’s a recap of some of our work we’re most proud of from 2020 (and this hardly scratches the surface!). Launched a new marketing and advertising strategy for …

Talking About Data: How To Drive Understanding and Action

Landry Butler Blog, Insights

Sharing complex business data with your stakeholders and other audiences, and communicating it in a way that provides insight and drives action, can be a daunting task. What are they looking for? Should you give high-level analysis or a deep dive into the details? What is their level of understanding the data? Goal No. 1 is clear communication. Effective data analysis enables you to communicate findings accurately in language that audiences can understand. Differing expectations and overuse of specialized language can result in misunderstandings and other barriers to addressing your business needs.  Tell the story.When developing your analysis, it is …

Annual Report: Design for Impact

Megan Willoughby Blog, Insights

It’s that time of year again. Christmas decorating, cookie baking, Hallmark movies and annual reports. Yes, you heard me: annual reports. Those year-in-review documents stuffed with so many balance sheets and dollar signs that your eyes will cross. Those thick books filled with edge-of-your-seat page titles like Cash Flow Statement and Profit and Loss. If your company name starts with a Z and ends with an M, or you sell athleisure wear (I haven’t worn real pants since March), you’re probably thrilled to be reliving or recapping 2020. But even if you’re among those who struggled this year, annual reports …

Eight Traits of Great Emails

Knight Stivender Blog, Insights

Chances are there are a few unread marketing emails and companywide blasts in your inbox right now. Some you’ll click on immediately, maybe even read all the way through. And some will be an immediate Shift + Delete.  What makes the difference when it comes to good email and bad?  An election season, the COVID-19 pandemic and now the holidays give us a lot of examples of both types. Here are a few ways to stand out from the crowd — in a good way.  Would You Open This?The subject line is arguably the most important part of an email, …

Key Takeaways From Adobe MAX 2020

MP&F Staff Blog, Insights

Every year, Adobe – a software company many creative teams use for everything from design to illustration to photo editing – produces Adobe MAX, ordinarily an in-person conference highlighting new products, software releases, tutorials and inspirational talks.  This year, creatives from all over the world tuned in for a free, virtual conference to draw inspiration and learn from the best in the business. Our team’s key takeaways from this year’s event: 1. Virtual collaboration among creative teams is more important than ever. Creative people draw inspiration from being around each other. Whether in internal teams or with our clients, we …

How To Talk About Your Work (Organization, Project, Etc.) Without Bragging

Knight Stivender Blog, Insights

As an editor at The Tennessean several years before joining MP&F, I knew the folks at the firm before I became one of them. Whenever an MP&F executive entered our newsroom – especially a partner wearing a suit, which was the only thing partners wore to the newsroom in those days – we knew the story they were bringing with them would be important, exclusive, top-secret – or all of those things. Now that I am lucky enough to work at MP&F myself, I understand that beneath my colleagues’ polished presentations are people whose pandemic work-from-home lives are just as …

Are You Remaining Virtually Engaged With Colleagues?

Angela Argiro Blog, Inspiration

In a time of remote work, making sure we find ways to enjoy each other is more important than ever. Do Great Work. Have Fun. Make Money.As a member of MP&F’s RAA-RAA (aka party planning) Committee, fulfilling the “Have Fun” portion of our company tagline has always been one of my favorite parts of working here. From monthly birthday treats to extravagant Halloween parties, to making sure the Kegerator always has a great local beer on-tap, it’s never been much of a challenge to make sure my fellow MP&Fers enjoy a never-ending supply of fun. Now in a time of remote …

Designing for Inclusivity

Mary Elizabeth Davis Blog, Insights

When you read “inclusive design,” your mind may go immediately to accessibility and compliance. But, it’s so much more than that.   Inclusive design is putting people first. It’s designing for the needs of people with permanent, temporary, situational or ever-changing challenges. While you can’t make a short person taller (or, a tall person shorter for that matter), you can adapt the environment so that any challenges are less pronounced. This is where inclusive design comes in. It’s about being intentional before you even take the first step. It’s an ongoing process and requires doing the work to understand your …

Diversity at MP&F: Looking Under the Hood

MP&F Staff Blog, Inspiration

As an independently owned communications firm in business for 33 years, MP&F has always believed that the diversity of our company is important. We benefit from the richness diversity brings to our culture, we benefit from the different perspectives it brings to our work for our clients, and we benefit from the incredible people we get to work with, who are part of our MP&F family.  As a company that advises other organizations on the best ways to communicate to diverse audiences, we know from experience that having a diverse company allows us to do our job better. But beyond …

I’m a Lifelong Washington NFL Fan, and It’s Past Time To Change the Name

Javier Solano Blog, Inspiration

As a lifelong fan of the NFL franchise now known as the Washington Football Team, my relationship to it now spanning five decades, I remember Super Bowl VII. I remember the lovable “Over the Hill Gang” that lost, 14–7, as the footnote to Miami’s perfect season. I don’t remember that, in the spring of 1972, months before that Super Bowl season began, a delegation of Native American leaders met with Redskins President Edward Bennett Williams and urged him to change the team’s name, which means that the controversy over the team name is at least 48 years old. Williams tweaked …